• it_depends_man@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    No?

    https://wir2026.wid.world/

    https://wir2026.wid.world/www-site/uploads/2026/04/World_Inequality_Report_2026.pdf

    pages 130 to 133 is about “Chapter 7. Global Taxation of Multi-Millionaires”

    Searching for references does bring up something page 206, but again, more half of their sources are just themselves.

    Actually the only two external sources are the world inequality report from 2022 and the “real time inequality” by the national bureau of economic research.

    References
    Alvaredo, F (2018). World Inequality Report 2018. Harvard
    University Press.
    Alvaredo, Facundo et al. (2022). “The inequality (or the
    growth) we measure: Data gaps and the distribution of
    incomes”. In: World Inequality Lab, Working Paper Series
    2022/07.
    Blanchet, Thomas, Emmanuel Saez, and Gabriel Zucman
    (2022). “Real-time inequality”. In: National Bureau of
    Economic Research.
    Chancel, Lucas, Ignacio Flores, et al. (2025). Distributional
    National Accounts Guidelines: Methods and Concepts used
    in the World Inequality Database. https://wid.world/d
    ocument/distributional-national-accounts-dina
    -guidelines-2025-methods-and-concepts-used-i
    n-the-world-inequality-database/. Version 3.0.
    Chancel, Lucas, Thomas Piketty, et al. (2022). World
    Inequality Report 2022. Harvard University Press.
    Gómez-Carrera, Ricardo et al. (2024). “Global Inequality
    Update 2024: New Insights from Extended WID
    Macro Series”. In: World Inequality Lab, Technical Notes
    2024/11.
    Neef, Theresa and Anne-Sophie Robilliard (2021). “Half
    the Sky? The Female Labor Income Share in a Global
    Perspective”. In: World Inequality Lab, Working Paper
    Series 2021/22.
    Nievas, Gastón and Thomas Piketty (2025). “WID National
    Accounts Series: Updated and Extended Coverage
    1800-2023”. I